Roinn Cosanta. Bureauof Military 1913-21 Statement

Roinn Cosanta. Bureauof Military 1913-21 Statement

ROINN COSANTA. BUREAUOF MILITARY 1913-21W.S. STATEMENT BY WITNESS DOCUMENT NO. 474 LiamWitness Commandant Haugh Donoughboy Co. KilkeeGlare. Identity and 0/C. A.S.U. Adjutant West Clare Brigade November 1920-July 1921. Subject West Clare 1909-1921; (b) Death of Captain Lendrum, R.M., 6/9/1920, and other military activities, West Clare, up to 11th July 1921. stipulated by Witness Conditions,if any, Nil File No. S1575 FormB.S.M.2. STATEMENTOF COMMANDANT LIAM HAUGH, DONOUGHBOY, KILKEE, CLARE. CO. CONTENTS. Part I. Pages 1. National movement in West Clare up to end of 1916 1 to 2. 2. Volunteer organisation in West Clare 1917-18. 2 to 3. 3. on and military at Attacks police posts Lahinch, Knockerra Cross, Cooraclare, etc. 1919. 3 to 6 4. Shooting of police returning from church at Kilmihil, 1920 7 to 8 5. Defective grenades received in the area. 8. Part II. Sinn Court decision enforced by 1. Fein Volunteers causing death of Mr. Martin and a Volunteer named Hasset. 9 to 10 2. Arms and from ammunitionsmuggled U.S.A. by a returning American assisted by daughter of retired R.I.C. Sergeant. 10 to 11 3. British protection against a decision of 8inn Fein Court 11 4. Formation of flying column, July 1920. 11 12 5. The column disbanded effort to counter enemy intelligence shooting of R.I.C. detective and reassembly of column 12 15 6. Capture of with supplies at Burrane 16 G.S. wagon 7. Abortive ambush of British forces between Kilrush and Kilmihil 17 18 8. Shooting of Captain Lendrum and reprisals therefor 18 20 9. Brigade Council meeting (September 1920) reviews the situation 21 23 10. Round November up of Volunteers, 1920. Brigade 0/C. and Q.M. escape arrest. 24 25 11. of the roads 25 Trenching 12. Execution of a spy and shooting of two Volunteer officers while in military custody 26 13. Road trenching incidents and carrying of hostages 27 28 2. pages 14. Capture of a British aeroplane with Intelligence reports 28 15. Activities by the combinedEast Clare West columns 28 and Clare 32 16. Destruction of the home of the Brigade Adjutant (Comdt. Haugh) by British forces. 32 33 General conditions in Clare early 1921 33 35 17. 18. Execution of enemy agent 36 19. Force of 300 British comb Monmore Company in search of the Volunteers dugout. shelters. Brigade meeting at Scrofuil. 37 School addressed by two G.H.Q. officers. 20. Some examples of indiscipline and treachery among Volunteers 38 39 21. Mention of "Z" ammunition specially made by British to damage Volunteer arms. 39. STRTEMINT OF C0MMANDANT LIAM HAUGH, DONOUGHBOY, KILEE. CO. CLARE. PARTI. The movement first launched in West Clare Sinn Fein was in the summerof l909, on which occasion the Dublin headquarters wasrepresented by the late Sean MacDermott. It may be safely said that 9O% of the able-bodied populatio joined the Redmond volunteers. Leadership of the various units was accepted by the professional and influentialinfuential classes,classes and drilling with dummy arms, etc. was intensively carried on. Redmond's declaration in favour of Britain, consequent on the outbreak of the World War, did not exactly cause a split; His the classes who accepted leadership accepted Redmond's suggestion, but, on endeavouring to impose their views on the rank and file, were simply deserted en masse. A minimum enlisted, into Britain's army, but the Volunteers as such disintegrated. Up to this (1904-1915) Sinn Fein could be considered a minus quantity, until the district was visited in 1915 by organisers from Dublin. West Glare was then struck out as a battalion area, with Art. O'Donnell of Tullycrine in charge as battalion commandant. Organisation and training was nost intensive in. the Carrigaholt area; the old Fenian tradition being strongeet hereabouts. About a dozen rifles were landed here towards the end of 1915, off a cargo boat. They were at night encased in a coffin and were secreted/in the C.C's. house. Some weeks prior to the rising, a lookout was kept on the Shannon coast; this, on the instructions of G.H.Q. which was represented on the spot by Sean Ó Murthuilo and P. Brennan.. The possibility of Roger Casement's or other landing from an outside agency in support of the forthcoming rising was presumed. However, no such landing took place. 2. Mobilisationa took place at three points on Easter Monday Carrigaholt, Cranny and Kildys art. Only the Crrtga-holt Section bad any arms worth while. Numbere (combined) amounted to about 100 men. No further action of a hostile nature was undertaken, and the three parties quietly dispersed during the week. About a dozen arrests took place in the area the week following. On the suggestion of the Parish Priest the arms meld in the Carrigeholt area were handed up to him. He handed them over to the R.I.C. While moving them from his residence to the local barracks be lost one. This was: retrieved and secreted by a local Volunteer. The Sinn Fein movement again began to gather momentum in the Spring of 1917. The area was now re-organised into a Brigade comprised of five battalions, as follows The let Battn. Kildysart, Cranny, Coolmeen. 2nd Kilrush, Kilmihil, Kilmurry MoMahon. 3rd Cooraclare, Monmore, Dunbeg, Bealaha. 4th, Kilmurry, Brickane, Quilty, Doolough. 5th Kilkee, Moyasta, Carrigaholt, Loop Head. The eastern boundary of the Brigade area followed a line Quilty, Doolough Lake, Kildysart inclusive. The Carrigaholt area again took the lead in training and organisation. The local company was at target practice in March 1917 with a miniature rifle. A young man named Keane crossed the line of fire and was killed. This was the first casualty in the Brigade area. At Christmas 1917, an R.I.C. man, cycling from Kilkee to Carrigaholt, was held up in the Kilferagh district and tied to a telegraph pole. The unfortunate man was almost frozen when released. towards morning. On 18th March 1918, the Sinn Fein Cumann held a meeting at the village hall in Carrigaholt. A force of military in Kilrush maintained communication with Carrigaholt by river. In the course of the meeting one of these river patrols 3. arrived... A party of military in charge of an officer entered the hall and ordered the dispersal of the meeting. The local company officer, Eamon Fennel, who was chairman of the meeting, refused. He ordered the people to stand fast and, defied the military. The latter immediately attacked the unarmed meeting with butt and bayonet. Thomas Russell, an Irish teacher and a native of Dingle, was. fatally stabbed. Fennel was seriously wounded by a bayonet thrust, and about a dozen others received less serious injuries. A few arrests were made which resulted in jeil sentences. After this occurrence the military arm of Sinn Fein was largely quiescent in this district. The enemy established, a military post in Kilkee in July 1918. A local small. farmer and fisherman, named Studdert, while standing on a fence in the vicinity of this post was shot dead by a sentry. In April 1918, an R.I.C. patrol of three men were rushed and deprived of their arms (carbines) at Knockerra Cross three miles. from Kilrush. The arms were dumped in a bouse only fifty yards off, while the police were still on the spot. Not only were the arms recovered, but nine of the attackers were rounded up including the brigade commandant and marched to Kilrush. All suffered jail sentences. There was an order issued for a combined attack by the three Clara Brigades, on the military post at Golf Links Hotel, Lahinch, early in the Spring of 1919. The West Clare contingent had arrived at the rendezvous when the order was countermanded. About this time an order was issued for combined attacks on all R.I.C. patrols. This was also countermanded on the point of being put into effect. The centre of activity in West Clare now shifted to the village of Cooraclare. In Apr11 1919, two membera. of an R.I.C. 4. patrol were rushed and disained outside the village. A boycott on the R.I.O. garrison was strictly enforced, and the post was atacked but not taken. The attackers used the two captured rifles the rifle recovered at Carrigaholt and some shotguns. This resulted in the establishment of an enemy military post in the neighbourhood. A local wealth'r esident tho entertained some members. of the enemy garrison now also suffered boycott He was fired at and wounded and altogether endured a generous sample of the hot hereafter prior to repentance. In July 1919, both the military and R.I.C. evacuated the village. There were eleven R.I.C. posts in the brigade area up to this. This was the first evacuation and marked the commencement of enemy withdrawal. The furniture of a married member of the R.I.C. was yet in the village. Feeling that this would be collected within a short time, the local company commander (at present Superinten-dent Sean Liddy, G.S.) prepared an ambush position. The three rifles at hand were useless, the small amount of ammunition therefor having been fired at the barrack. Main reliance was (or Pvnt placed on a large shore-gun and a few shotguns. The ambushers Gun) who numbered. six, with two scouts, took up their allotted positions, while the R.I.C. van in charge of four armed po1ice was yet in the village. The shore gun was charged with four times its capacity in black powder, and then almost to the muzzle with shot of all sizes, bits of metal, etc.

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